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SYSTAT(1)		    General Commands Manual		     SYSTAT(1)

NAME
       systat -- display system	statistics on a	crt

SYNOPSIS
       systat [-display] [refresh-interval]

DESCRIPTION
       The  systat utility displays various system statistics in a screen ori-
       ented fashion using the curses screen display library, ncurses(3).

       While systat is running the screen is usually divided into two  windows
       (an exception is	the vmstat display which uses the entire screen).  The
       upper  window depicts the current system	load average.  The information
       displayed in the	lower window may vary,	depending  on  user  commands.
       The  last  line on the screen is	reserved for user input	and error mes-
       sages.

       By default systat displays the processes	getting	the largest percentage
       of the processor	in the lower window.  Other displays show  swap	 space
       usage,  disk I/O	statistics (a la iostat(8)), virtual memory statistics
       (a la vmstat(8)), network ``mbuf'' utilization, TCP/IP statistics,  and
       network connections (a la netstat(1)).

       Input is	interpreted at two different levels.  A	``global'' command in-
       terpreter  processes  all  keyboard input.  If this command interpreter
       fails to	recognize a command, the input line is passed to a per-display
       command interpreter.  This allows each display to have certain display-
       specific	commands.

       Command line options:

       -display		 The - flag expects display to be one of: icmp,	icmp6,
			 iostat, ip, ip6, mbufs, netstat, pigs,	swap, tcp,  or
			 vmstat.   These displays can also be requested	inter-
			 actively (without the "-") and	are described in  full
			 detail	below.

       refresh-interval	 The  refresh-value  specifies the screen refresh time
			 interval in seconds.

       Certain characters cause	immediate action by systat.  These are

       ^L	   Refresh the screen.

       ^G	   Print the name of the current ``display''  being  shown  in
		   the lower window and	the refresh interval.

       :	   Move	the cursor to the command line and interpret the input
		   line	typed as a command.  While entering a command the cur-
		   rent	 character erase, word erase, and line kill characters
		   may be used.

       The following commands are interpreted by the ``global''	command	inter-
       preter.

       help	   Print the names of the available displays  on  the  command
		   line.

       load	   Print  the  load average over the past 1, 5,	and 15 minutes
		   on the command line.

       stop	   Stop	refreshing the screen.

       [start] [number]
		   Start (continue) refreshing the screen.  If a  second,  nu-
		   meric,  argument is provided	it is interpreted as a refresh
		   interval (in	seconds).  Supplying only a  number  will  set
		   the refresh interval	to this	value.

       quit	   Exit	systat.	 (This may be abbreviated to q.)

       The available displays are:

       pigs	   Display,  in	 the lower window, those processes resident in
		   main	memory and getting the largest portion of the  proces-
		   sor	(the  default  display).   When	 less than 100%	of the
		   processor is	scheduled to  user  processes,	the  remaining
		   time	is accounted to	the ``idle'' process.

       icmp	   Display, in the lower window, statistics about messages re-
		   ceived and transmitted by the Internet Control Message Pro-
		   tocol  ("ICMP").   The left half of the screen displays in-
		   formation about received packets, and the right  half  dis-
		   plays information regarding transmitted packets.

		   The	icmp display understands two commands: mode and	reset.
		   The mode command is used to	select	one  of	 four  display
		   modes, given	as its argument:
		   rate:       show  the rate of change	of each	value in pack-
			       ets (the	default) per second
		   delta:      show the	rate of	change of each value in	 pack-
			       ets per refresh interval
		   since:      show  the  total	change of each value since the
			       display was last	reset
		   absolute:   show the	absolute value of each statistic

		   The reset command resets the	baseline for since mode.   The
		   mode	command	with no	argument will display the current mode
		   in the command line.

       icmp6	   This	display	is like	the icmp display, but displays statis-
		   tics	for IPv6 ICMP.

       ip	   Otherwise  identical	 to  the  icmp display,	except that it
		   displays IP and UDP statistics.

       ip6	   Like	the ip display,	except that it displays	IPv6  statics.
		   It does not display UDP statistics.

       tcp	   Like	icmp, but with TCP statistics.

       iostat	   Display,  in	 the  lower window, statistics about processor
		   use and disk	throughput.  Statistics	on processor  use  ap-
		   pear	 as bar	graphs of the amount of	time executing in user
		   mode	 (``user''),  in  user	mode  running	low   priority
		   processes  (``nice''),  in system mode (``system''),	in in-
		   terrupt mode	(``interrupt''), and idle (``idle'').  Statis-
		   tics	on disk	throughput show, for each drive, megabytes per
		   second, average number of disk transactions per second, and
		   average kilobytes of	data per transaction.	This  informa-
		   tion	 may  be displayed as bar graphs or as rows of numbers
		   which scroll	downward.  Bar graphs are shown	by default.

		   The following commands are specific to the iostat  display;
		   the minimum unambiguous prefix may be supplied.

		   numbers     Show  the  disk I/O statistics in numeric form.
			       Values are displayed in numeric	columns	 which
			       scroll downward.
		   bars	       Show  the disk I/O statistics in	bar graph form
			       (default).
		   kbpt	       Toggle the display of  kilobytes	 per  transac-
			       tion.  (the default is to not display kilobytes
			       per transaction).

       swap	   Show	information about swap space usage on all the swap ar-
		   eas	compiled into the kernel.  The first column is the de-
		   vice	name of	the partition.	The next column	is  the	 total
		   space  available  in	 the partition.	 The Used column indi-
		   cates the total blocks used so far;	the  graph  shows  the
		   percentage of space in use on each partition.  If there are
		   more	 than  one swap	partition in use, a total line is also
		   shown.  Areas known to the kernel, but not in use are shown
		   as not available.

       mbufs	   Display, in the lower window, the number of mbufs allocated
		   for particular uses,	i.e. data, socket structures, etc.

       vmstat	   Take	over the entire	display	and show  a  (rather  crowded)
		   compendium  of  statistics related to virtual memory	usage,
		   process scheduling, device interrupts, system name transla-
		   tion	cacheing, disk I/O etc.

		   The upper left quadrant of the screen shows the  number  of
		   users  logged  in  and  the load average over the last one,
		   five, and fifteen minute intervals.	Below  this  line  are
		   statistics on memory	utilization.  The first	row of the ta-
		   ble	reports	memory usage only among	active processes, that
		   is processes	that have run in the previous twenty  seconds.
		   The	second	row  reports on	memory usage of	all processes.
		   The first column reports on the number  of  physical	 pages
		   claimed by processes.  The second column reports the	number
		   of physical pages that are devoted to read only text	pages.
		   The	third  and  fourth columns report the same two figures
		   for virtual pages, that is the number of pages  that	 would
		   be needed if	all processes had all of their pages.  Finally
		   the	last  column shows the number of physical pages	on the
		   free	list.

		   Below the memory display is a list of the average number of
		   processes  (over  the  last	refresh	 interval)  that   are
		   runnable (`r'), in page wait	(`p'), in disk wait other than
		   paging  (`d'), sleeping (`s'), and swapped out but desiring
		   to run (`w').  The row also shows  the  average  number  of
		   context  switches  (`Csw'),	traps  (`Trp';	includes  page
		   faults), system calls (`Sys'), interrupts (`Int'),  network
		   software interrupts (`Sof'),	and page faults	(`Flt').

		   Below the process queue length listing is a numerical list-
		   ing	and a bar graph	showing	the amount of system (shown as
		   `='), interrupt (shown as `+'), user	(shown as  `>'),  nice
		   (shown as `-'), and idle time (shown	as ` ').

		   Below  the  process display are statistics on name transla-
		   tions.  It lists the	number of names	translated in the pre-
		   vious interval, the number and percentage of	 the  transla-
		   tions that were handled by the system wide name translation
		   cache,  and	the  number and	percentage of the translations
		   that	were handled  by  the  per  process  name  translation
		   cache.

		   At  the  bottom left	is the disk usage display.  It reports
		   the number of kilobytes per transaction,  transactions  per
		   second, megabytes per second	and the	percentage of the time
		   the	disk  was busy averaged	over the refresh period	of the
		   display (by default,	five seconds).	The system keeps  sta-
		   tistics  on	most  every storage device.  In	general, up to
		   seven devices are displayed.	 The devices displayed by  de-
		   fault  are  the  first devices in the kernel's device list.
		   See devstat(3) and devstat(9) for details  on  the  devstat
		   system.

		   Under the date in the upper right hand quadrant are statis-
		   tics	 on  paging  and  swapping  activity.	The  first two
		   columns report the average number of	pages brought  in  and
		   out	per  second over the last refresh interval due to page
		   faults and the paging daemon.  The third and	fourth columns
		   report the average number of	pages brought in and  out  per
		   second  over	the last refresh interval due to swap requests
		   initiated by	the scheduler.	The first row of  the  display
		   shows  the average number of	disk transfers per second over
		   the last refresh interval; the second row  of  the  display
		   shows  the  average	number of pages	transferred per	second
		   over	the last refresh interval.

		   Below the paging statistics is a column of lines  regarding
		   the	virtual	memory system which list the average number of
		   pages copied	on write (`cow'), pages	zero filled on	demand
		   (`zfod'),  slow  (on-the-fly) zero fills percentage (`%slo-
		   z'),	pages wired down (`wire'), active pages	(`act'), inac-
		   tive	pages (`inact'),  pages	 on  the  buffer  cache	 queue
		   (`cache'),  number  of  free	pages (`free'),	pages freed by
		   the page daemon (`daefr'), pages freed by exiting processes
		   (`prcfr'), pages reactivated	from the free list  (`react'),
		   times  the  page  daemon was	awakened (`pdwak'), pages ana-
		   lyzed by the	page daemon (`pdpgs'), and intransit  blocking
		   page	faults (`intrn') per second over the refresh interval.

		   At  the  bottom of this column are lines showing the	amount
		   of memory, in kilobytes, used for the buffer	cache (`buf'),
		   the number of dirty buffers in the  buffer  cache  (`dirty-
		   buf'),  desired  maximum  size  of vnode cache (`desiredvn-
		   odes') (mostly unused, except to size the name cache), num-
		   ber of vnodes actually allocated (`numvnodes'), and	number
		   of allocated	vnodes that are	free (`freevnodes').

		   Running down	the right hand side of the display is a	break-
		   down	of the interrupts being	handled	by the system.	At the
		   top of the list is the total	interrupts per second over the
		   time	 interval.  The	rest of	the column breaks down the to-
		   tal on a device by device basis.  Only  devices  that  have
		   interrupted at least	once since boot	time are shown.

		   The	following commands are specific	to the vmstat display;
		   the minimum unambiguous prefix may be supplied.

		   boot		 Display cumulative statistics since the  sys-
				 tem was booted.
		   run		 Display  statistics  as  a running total from
				 the point this	command	is given.
		   time		 Display statistics averaged over the  refresh
				 interval (the default).
		   want_fd	 Toggle	 the display of	fd devices in the disk
				 usage display.
		   zero		 Reset running statistics to zero.

       netstat	   Display, in the lower window, network connections.  By  de-
		   fault, network servers awaiting requests are	not displayed.
		   Each	address	is displayed in	the format ``host.port'', with
		   each	 shown symbolically, when possible.  It	is possible to
		   have	addresses displayed numerically, limit the display  to
		   a  set of ports, hosts, and/or protocols (the minimum unam-
		   biguous prefix may be supplied):

		   all		 Toggle	the  displaying	 of  server  processes
				 awaiting  requests (this is the equivalent of
				 the -a	flag to	netstat(1)).
		   numbers	 Display network addresses numerically.
		   names	 Display network addresses symbolically.
		   proto protocol
				 Display only network  connections  using  the
				 indicated  protocol.  Supported protocols are
				 ``tcp'', ``udp'', and ``all''.
		   ignore [items]
				 Do not	display	information about  connections
				 associated with the specified hosts or	ports.
				 Hosts	and  ports  may	 be  specified by name
				 (``vangogh'', ``ftp''), or numerically.  Host
				 addresses  use	 the  Internet	dot   notation
				 (``128.32.0.9'').    Multiple	items  may  be
				 specified with	a single command by separating
				 them with spaces.
		   display [items]
				 Display information about the connections as-
				 sociated with the specified hosts  or	ports.
				 As  for  ignore, [items] may be names or num-
				 bers.
		   show	[ports|hosts]
				 Show, on the command line, the	currently  se-
				 lected	 protocols,  hosts,  and ports.	 Hosts
				 and ports which are being  ignored  are  pre-
				 fixed	with a `!'.  If	ports or hosts is sup-
				 plied as an argument to show, then  only  the
				 requested information will be displayed.
		   reset	 Reset	the  port, host, and protocol matching
				 mechanisms  to	 the  default  (any  protocol,
				 port, or host).

       Commands	 to  switch between displays may be abbreviated	to the minimum
       unambiguous prefix; for example,	``io'' for ``iostat''.	Certain	infor-
       mation may be discarded when the	screen size is insufficient  for  dis-
       play.   For  example,  on a machine with	10 drives the iostat bar graph
       displays	only 3 drives on a 24 line terminal.  When a bar  graph	 would
       overflow	the allotted screen space it is	truncated and the actual value
       is printed ``over top'' of the bar.

       The  following commands are common to each display which	shows informa-
       tion about disk drives.	These commands are used	to  select  a  set  of
       drives  to  report  on,	should your system have	more drives configured
       than can	normally be displayed on the screen.

       ignore [drives]
		     Do	not display information	about  the  drives  indicated.
		     Multiple drives may be specified, separated by spaces.
       display [drives]
		     Display information about the drives indicated.  Multiple
		     drives may	be specified, separated	by spaces.
       only [drives]
		     Display  only  the	specified drives.  Multiple drives may
		     be	specified, separated by	spaces.
       drives	     Display a list of available devices.
       match type,if,pass [| ...]
		     Display devices matching the given	 pattern.   The	 basic
		     matching  expressions  are	 the  same  as	those  used in
		     iostat(8) with one	 difference.   Instead	of  specifying
		     multiple  -t  arguments which are then ORed together, the
		     user  instead  specifies  multiple	 matching  expressions
		     joined  by	the pipe (`|') character.  The comma separated
		     arguments within each matching expression are  ANDed  to-
		     gether,  and then the pipe	separated matching expressions
		     are ORed together.	 Any device matching the combined  ex-
		     pression  will  be	displayed, if there is room to display
		     it.  For example:

			   match da,scsi | cd,ide

		     This will display all SCSI	Direct Access devices and  all
		     IDE CDROM devices.

			   match da | sa | cd,pass

		     This  will	display	all Direct Access devices, all Sequen-
		     tial Access devices, and  all  passthrough	 devices  that
		     provide access to CDROM drives.

SEE ALSO
       netstat(1),  kvm(3),  icmp(4), icmp6(4),	ip(4), ip6(4), tcp(4), udp(4),
       iostat(8), vmstat(8)

FILES
       /kernel	      For the namelist.
       /dev/kmem      For information in main memory.
       /etc/hosts     For host names.
       /etc/networks  For network names.
       /etc/services  For port names.

HISTORY
       The systat program appeared in 4.3BSD.  The icmp, ip, and tcp  displays
       appeared	 in  FreeBSD 3.0; the notion of	having different display modes
       for the ICMP, IP, TCP, and UDP statistics was stolen from the -C	option
       to netstat(1) in	Silicon	Graphics' IRIX system.

BUGS
       Certain displays	presume	a minimum of  80  characters  per  line.   The
       vmstat  display	looks out of place because it is (it was added in as a
       separate	display	rather than created as a new program).

FreeBSD	4.9		       September 9, 1997		     SYSTAT(1)

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